Functional inactivation of Dermatophagoides spp. (house dust mite) reactive human T-cell clones |
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Authors: | R. E. O'HEHIR&dagger ,B. A. AGUILAR,T. J. SCHMIDT,S. O. GOLLNICK,J. R. LAMB&dagger |
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Affiliation: | ImmuLogic Pharmaceutical Corporation, Palo Alto, California. |
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Abstract: | Staphylococcal enterotoxins are able both to stimulate powerful polyclonal proliferative responses and to induce non-responsiveness of T lymphocytes expressing the appropriate T-cell antigen receptor V beta gene products. T-cell clones representative of the human response to house dust mite were identified that express either V beta 3 or V beta 6 gene products. The specificity of the latter was confirmed by serology. Pre-treatment of cloned V beta 3+ T cells with the Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins B or C1 rendered them non-responsive to immunogenic challenge with their natural ligand, while retaining responsiveness to exogenous IL-2. Similarly, exposure of the V beta 6+ dust mite reactive T cells to the staphylococcal enterotoxin of the appropriate specificity, SEE, induced specific anergy. The development of non-responsiveness was associated with changes in the T-cell phenotypes. Downregulation of the T-cell receptor, Ti-CD3, was paralleled by enhanced expression of both CD2 and the IL-2 receptor, CD25. Differential co-modulation of CD4 and Ti-CD3 suggested that for some T cells CD4 may form part of the specific antigen recognition structure. Toxicity of the staphylococcal enterotoxins may be removed by chemical modification, thus their ability functionally to inactivate subpopulations of T cells expressing antigen-specific receptors with shared characteristics may be of potential value in the regulation of allergic diseases if the diversity of the T-cell repertoire proves to be limited. |
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